Private School Facilities Facing Expansion Needs

Many parents look to private schools as an alternative to public schools. Although there are various factors that affect that decision, a large influence is that most public schools today have overcrowded classrooms. As private schools increase in popularity, they are often faced with space and volume constraints as well. What should these private schools be considering when they choose to increase their capacity to handle the influx of additional students?

When a school’s enrollment exceeds the design capacity of its facility, student academic performance declines along with the “enjoyability” of school for faculty, students, and parents. Overcrowding is one of the biggest challenges facing teachers today. The devastating effects from such classrooms impact much more beyond our children’s ability to learn. They also can impair the psychological well-being of both teacher and student, create unsafe environments, and ultimately diminish the potential of our children’s futures.

Although it is evident that a school’s physical facility does have an impact on the welfare of everyone involved, the building is rarely evaluated for its utilization, condition, or design.

The following four factors have been studied to better understand how school facilities influence teaching and learning. A private school planning a physical expansion of its campus should consider these key design and condition characteristics:

1. Acoustics

Both students and teachers perform better in quieter classrooms, where they do not have to strain to hear or be heard.

4. Thermal comfort

Another factor that School Facilities Directors must consider is the timing of an expansion project. Timing is critical, especially when it is possible that children and staff will be present for on an ongoing construction project. It is also matters when a school relying on the tuition dollars from incoming students is short on time and must have a seat for those students when classes begin! Many Facility Directors use the process of modular construction to ensure that their classroom projects are done quickly with little disruption to the site and its operation.

It’s also important to work with a contractor who is familiar with modular construction. Modular building projects happen in half the time of conventional construction. That means processes are tight and streamlined. Materials are the exact same, but because foundations and site preparation are done at the same time the building is being constructed in the factory, it takes a modular building expert to know how to coordinate those two activities.